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How Disney ruined Star Wars
The Spectator ^ | 05/18/2026 | Alexander Larman

Posted on 05/18/2026 9:28:27 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

This week, the new Star Wars picture – the first live action film since 2019’s commercially successful but largely ridiculed Rise of Skywalker – will come out in cinemas. Clunkily entitled The Mandalorian and Grogu, it is a big-screen spin-off of the once-successful and now largely passé Mandalorian series. A lot is riding on its success, and Lucasfilm, now controlled by Dave Filoni, will be very relieved if it is a hit.

Unfortunately, audiences don’t seem especially interested. Advance word on it has been mediocre for some time now – the words “feature-length television movie” have been used more than once – and the box office prediction for its opening weekend is currently somewhere between $70 and $85 million. Which might sound like a big hit, but given that The Rise of Skywalker made nearly $90 million on its opening day nearly seven years ago, this is an unimpressive figure, which may of course decline further if word of mouth is brutally negative.

If it does underperform – “flop” is a bit strong – then questions will be asked of Filoni’s judgement. Whether next summer’s Ryan Gosling-starring Star Wars: Starfighter is similarly doomed – and if audiences are weary of a series that has been systematically exploited and therefore ruined for years. With the more than honorable exception of the excellent Andor – which, if rumors are to be believed, Filoni was bewildered by – there hasn’t been anything any good in the Star Wars universe since Lucasfilm was acquired by Disney for $4 billion back in 2012.

It isn’t hard to see why not. Regardless of whether you are an especially big fan of Star Wars or not, there is no denying the way that the first film completely reshaped the American cinematic landscape when it emerged in 1977. Becoming an even bigger hit than Spielberg’s Jaws two years before and laying the groundwork for virtually every big-budget science-fiction fantasy that followed ever since. Its sequel, The Empire Strikes Back, is justifiably believed to be one of the seminal films ever made, introducing elements of moral ambiguity and genuine wit into the series.

Yet when Disney paid the big bucks for Lucasfilm, they were not thinking about moral ambiguity or wit, but instead as to how they could monetize the franchise for all that it was worth. The first revived Star Wars picture, The Force Awakens, was an enormous hit – at one point, the highest-grossing film ever made – and initially the investment seemed justified. Then amid massive controversy as to the sequel, The Last Jedi, the gilt soon came off the gingerbread. Lucasfilm and Disney were accused, rightly, of pursuing wokery over coherent plotting or characterization, which led to a feeling of contempt both for the series and for its audiences. Show any old rubbish on screen, and the dumb millions will show up for it, because it’s got Star Wars branding on it. How else can you explain one of the worst line readings in cinema, Oscar Isaac’s notorious “Somehow, Palpatine returned”, from Rise of Skywalker?

Whatever you make of George Lucas, who has now been absent from cinema since 2005’s Revenge of the Sith, he was at least a visionary, whose dedication to putting something new and thrilling on screen made up for his lack of skill with actors or dialogue. Nobody who has come after Lucas has ever had his innate understanding of the Star Wars universe, which has meant instead that there are as many as yet unmade projects floating around as there are existing uses of the IP. Everyone from Taiki Waititi and James Mangold (who did a spectacularly poor job with another Lucasfilm acquisition, Indiana Jones) to Game of Thrones writers D.B Weiss and David Benioff have been linked to new films, none of which have yet materialized. It might be a mercy if none of them ever did.

Nobody who has come after Lucas has ever had his innate understanding of the Star Wars universe

If The Mandalorian and Grogu and the forthcoming Gosling vehicle both disappoint, that will probably be it for Star Wars in its current form. Perhaps there might be some future in more adult-oriented, smaller projects. Andor remains the gold standard, although its viewing figures were hardly stellar. But it is more likely that Disney will lick their wounds and look for the next much-loved series to ruin.

Or, alternatively, they will throw everything they have at luring Christopher Nolan into reviving the series, with all the bells and whistles that contemporary cinema has. Although given the current scuttlebutt on The Odyssey, that’s hardly a genius idea, either. No doubt their $4 billion investment has been returned many times over since 2012, but maybe it is time that Disney took the hit and found fresh worlds to conquer. Somehow, I doubt they’ll do so.


TOPICS: Society; TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: disney; starwars

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To: Fresh Wind; JohnMiller

“Star Wars wasn’t science fiction, it was a modernized Saturday afternoon cowboy movie.”

Exactly - more space opera.

for hard science fiction you of course have 2001: A Space Odyssey or Gattaca or Primer


21 posted on 05/19/2026 4:52:49 AM PDT by Cronos (Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Disney could no doubt screw-up a one car funeral...


22 posted on 05/19/2026 4:54:35 AM PDT by unread (One of the largest cities in America has fallen to the communist... Think about that...)
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To: Doctor Congo

I don’t think “The Odyssey” is a Disney film - it’s by Universal I think


23 posted on 05/19/2026 4:58:52 AM PDT by Cronos (Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.)
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To: Fresh Wind
...the atrocious Star Wars Holiday Special

People tell themselves that never happened. It showed exactly what the producers of Star Wars thought of the franchise and what they thought of the audience.

I regularly hear that the Star Wars franchise was ruined in recent years. No, it was already dead in 1978.



24 posted on 05/19/2026 5:07:11 AM PDT by T.B. Yoits
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To: SeekAndFind

Disney needed a “boy” franchise to balance the “princess” franchises, so they bought Star Wars.

And then they decided not to make it a boy franchise. Lucas knew the strength of Star Wars was in its toy lines, and that was geared toward boys.

But, no, they needed to tell boys that these are the toys you’re going to play with.


25 posted on 05/19/2026 5:15:51 AM PDT by Tanniker Smith (Rome didn't fall in a day, either)
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To: T.B. Yoits
I regularly hear that the Star Wars franchise was ruined in recent years. No, it was already dead in 1978.

Ah yes...Episode VI: The Empire Strikes Back fared so poorly in 1980 as history shows < / s >

26 posted on 05/19/2026 5:41:32 AM PDT by Republican Wildcat
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To: BamaBelle

Haven’t seen any of those but Skeleton Crew probably was destroyed in the fall out of The Acolyte.


27 posted on 05/19/2026 5:43:45 AM PDT by Republican Wildcat
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To: Republican Wildcat

Yes, I agree. The Acolyte was terrible!


28 posted on 05/19/2026 5:47:15 AM PDT by BamaBelle (Psa 143:8 - ...cause me to know the way wherein I should walk; for I lift up my soul unto thee.)
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To: BamaBelle

The power of mannnnnnyy! LOL

And a character that was in his 70s during the time of Eps 1-3 (according to official canon materials) was somehow present in that show, even though it was taking place in the time line 400-500 years prior to the Eps 1-3. The writers don’t have a clue what they are doing, nor do they care.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hP2dR1TYzaE - How it should have ended: The Acolyte


29 posted on 05/19/2026 5:50:46 AM PDT by Republican Wildcat
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To: Republican Wildcat

Empire was the high point.

It was all down hill from there.


30 posted on 05/19/2026 5:52:31 AM PDT by mewzilla (Swing away, Mr. President, swing away! 🇺🇸 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿)
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To: SeekAndFind

Never understood Star Wars mania. The original was pretty cool but what’s not cool to a 7 year old. ?


31 posted on 05/19/2026 5:53:50 AM PDT by Hyman Roth
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To: SeekAndFind

Disney just killed it off. Lucas ruined Star Wars.


32 posted on 05/19/2026 7:44:54 AM PDT by IYAS9YAS (There are two kinds of people: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.)
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To: John Milner

“””””I love SciFi. Saw the first one the week it came out in 77. Thought it was kinda juvenile, dumb - and didn’t watch any more.”””””

When I saw the first one at the theater I was expecting Sci-fi and I walked out on it, but since everyone else enjoyed it I gave it a second try to see what I was overlooking, and that time I decided to look at it as other people were, an exciting fun space action adventure, and with that frame of mind I liked it a lot, I think I later watch a sequel with Jabba the Hutt maybe didn’t care for it and skipped the rest.


33 posted on 05/19/2026 8:19:24 AM PDT by ansel12
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